Mary R. McHugh is a Professor in the Department of Greek, Latin, and Classical Studies. She is a social historian whose wide-ranging scholarship encompasses political history, intellectual and cultural cross-pollination, and the history of food production and culture. A recently published chapter examines how Plato’s Timaeus shaped conceptions of time and cosmology within the intellectual milieu of Western Greece. McHugh argues that its call for cosmological models influenced a tradition of mathematical and mechanical innovation, from Archimedes’ devices to medieval and Renaissance astronomical clocks.
McHugh is adept at pursuing leads and situating the particular within its broader context. She has taught courses at all levels of Greek and Latin to those spanning Near Eastern and Greco-Roman history to Chinese and Islamic cultural exchanges with the West. She also teaches courses in art and archaeology, bringing her expertise in material culture directly into her research.
CLA-298: Chal Sem: Free Speech & Power
LAT-102: Beg. Latin II
CLA-211: Art & Archaeology of Greece
CLA-212: Art & Archeology of Rome
LAT-101: Beginning Latin I
CLA-399: Classics Capstone Seminar
LAT-202: Ovid: Myth & Power
CLA-101: Myth & Meaning
CLA-201: Anc Greek Hist/Culture
FTS-100: FTS:Burning Books